ttrtj ftaindrattt J { • * \ 1 SLYWE. •Uteres* ILLINOIS ' ,1,1 • it. !&" i w*-, ; • - ' ? Ht * A n", f"~r iP'> •Of ,! '& > ^ ' -;rv *: , «*% «•* : V " v >' *% » *1 W. »: WEEILT IEVS IEVIEI. THE FAST. <fn nx days' walking match in New wu won by Hsr-iol, the Englishman, who made mi miles. Five other contestants made 800 miles and npward. RowelL the hitherto- taviiic-blc pedestrian, tell hick, ua g*T8 up OB ftitB fvurtb day of tbo coufccrt. , Br a collision of trains near Earlville, N. I., Engineer Collins and Firemen Sullivan tad Blnmenkrow were killed. The nxadeBt waa due to a in winter pre tat ion of orders. THE bank jug-house of Charles A. Sweet & Co., of Boston, tmable to meet a caU foe $700,000 loaned to it on Massachusetts Central railroad bonds, suspended payment, causing th* greatest surprise. It* liabilities an given as $2.75.1,000, of which only $260,000 if un secured. THEODORE WALTON, of New York, is •aid to have won $400,000 in the recent pedes trian contest in that city David Navarro who was 21 yean of age and weighed 700 pounds, died in the Pittsburgh pest house of snall-pox. PHTLABEMPKIA papers reoorc! the DEATH •f 3>r. Joseph Pancoast, the eminent physician, »o#|»ffOfe®B0r ef Nu»tomy "»Jefferson Medical College Hazael, the winner of the recent walking-uiatch in New York, was paid $9,M0 for gate money and $9,000 for aweepetakea, Pedestrianism pays Twenty-one aea U°° ̂ etapured on the Pacific coast, have been plMM in Central Park, New York. , COBKWALL, an aged clerk of th# Fourth National Bank of New York, in charge of the call loan department, haa been disoov- enritota " Aortin his aooomts about $100,- Au. Hi* indicted star-twirten except eat Hiestsr Powey, J. W. Domy, L. Bandenoa snrt WfilTnim nnnwhr ha oonfftat WaAtaf- ton. Tne start fined ths bail as follows« Goa. BrMfcr. WO.OOO; A. BMk, O. Cabell, $6,0«; JJR. Ktoor7##,<»0; W. H. Tucoet, •3.80#: bile M Armsttong, $1,000; Harvey $2,10$; Crte M Armstrong, $1,000 ; Harvey ML Vail, $1,000; P. J. Sweet, $1,000; J. A. M<nnt» $1,500; Jamea W. Dobehne, $1,000; W. D. Bur linger. $1,000: W. Jaokson, $1,000, and Chariea H. Dickson, $1,00$. mmticai* Ooiwmnro's letter declining the Asso ciate Justiceship is said to have been mmntj a private note to the President, and will not be given oat to the public. ... ¥?< . |P:: *y/ s * J-. R vV-Vr ; -'.i t: -1,,. '* te ?-Mr, J *•} I 'i'# « iw#*i . / • Tw Mormon Legislature at Utah has callid a convention for April 1$ to organise a State Government in the Territory--An im- mense demonstration waa made in Ban Francisco in favor of the passage of laws preventing tte inrther importation of Chinese, 'All business houses were closed, the dav having been declared a legal holiday, and 30,000 people met to demand redress foe their grievance*. The best of ordei prevailed throughout, Besolut ons etpresaing the right of the people of the Pacific coast to protection from toe ftffifit"* influx were adopted nnani- nonily. H»HBT WABD BBOHXB fainted while delivering a lecture in Chicago, and was carried from the platform to his hotel....During the month of February there were 1* 8 deaths from •mall-pox IU Chicago.... A packing house of the Lake Superior Powder Company,, located three miles from Marquette, Mich., exploded, n^uig av&j every vettuge of the building, and hlrwriiiL four men to fragments. TV? Minnesota dairymen held their fint aoima] convention at Rochester. It waa a cnditaUe gatheting in every point of view.... The Sqfsme Court of the State of Ohio has decided itoat tbe attempted oonBolidati'm of the C.eveUnd, Columbus, Cincinnati and In&impoiK and the Cincinnati, Hamil- Ks mi:<d Dayton railroads was illegal, the ie&dmg reason assigned being that the road* were practically parallel and competing kata, the consohdaiibn of wuich is prohibited by ti.e fitatutee of Ohio. The decision is final, titer? being no appeal to the United States 8u- oreaae Court, and strikes a heavy blow at Mr. Vanderl'iit'B acheme for getting powesiion of another great trunk line. A DISPATCH from Albuquerque, New Mexico, says that "at Las Lunas, Charles 8hetton, John Redmond and Harry French woe taken from jail and hanged to the nearest trees by masked men. Shelton murdered Fore man Woodruff last fall. Redmond killed James McDermott last January at Gallup, on the At lantic and Pacific railway. French, alias Simp son, was one of & band of desperados who killed Deputy Sheriff J-. -nee at Crane's. The mob alao took t wo negroeu from jail beat them wimercifullv; and (turned them loose." 1HB NDn « dMhM-haa broken out in Bath county, Virginia, between the natives and a party of snrreyon engaged in measuring off a large tract of land belonging to Gem. F. Butler. Tbe surveyors were attacked by seventy-live Virginian*, and, af'er a sharp engagement, in which 100 shots were fired and several persons wounded, surrendered at discretion and left the aoontiy. A CONFLAGRATION at Jaekaos, Tenn., destroyed property valued at $60,000, includ ing; six business houses. John O. Massey and wife, respected citizens of Charlottesville, •a., were murdered by burglars. AT Harrisburg, Ark., Prof. Wilmot, a adiool teacher, was murdered by County Treas urer Smith in a dispute relative to the punish- . meat in school of Bmith's child. WASH1M6T01V. TEE House Committee on Civil-Serr- iBbfieiann, of which Mr. Orth, of Indians, is Oiairman, has agreed upon a bill for the reference of all private and individual llaJms, pensions, etc., to the Court of Claims. It is provided that the final decision on all Qaoaai Boom&is haa ended hia ooo- nection with the Ouitean case. One of the as» •assin's relatives in Boston announces the dis covery of important evidence regarding the in- •anitv of the condemned man, and it is ru mored that Gen. Butler has consented to mm for a new tnal. AFTER prolonged conferences, Envoj Trescott and the Chilian Minister of Foreign Affairs drew up a protocol to serve as the basis of a treaty of peace between Peru and Chili, leaving in abeyance the subject of indemnity. DR. BOYNTOK has written to Dr. Bax ter, Medical Purveyor of the United States Army, that Dr. Bliss was never placcd m charge of President Garfield's case by any member of the family, and that he continued to act with out authority. On the back of this letter is an n doraement of its contents by Mrs. Oarfield. The document iu beiiig circulated among Sen ators and members of Congress to defeat the payment of the amonnt awarded to Bliss. IN the Taos Paeblo district of New Mexico, a party of fifty-nine Indians killed one Deputy Sheriff and mortally wounded another. Hie fight grew out of some arrests for drank- ennoss. TEDS *"""*1 meeting of the Union Pa- eific railroad was held in New York. The total earnings for the year were $24,258,817 (an in- rcease of nearly $2,000,000 tover the previous year's receipts), and the net earnings were $11,- 778,474. Sidney Dillon was elected President. ....The Western Union Telegraph Company has declared a quarterly dividend of per cent Its gross revenues for 1881 are reported at$16,868.896....Eleven highwaymen are re ported killed near the City of Mexico, having attacked a staga-ooaeh that was full of armed passengers. A SKLIOATIOH of the health officers of various cities west of the Alleghenies and of the Northwest have been in Washington, seek ing to secure the co-operation of Congress in preventing the importation of small-pox into this country. They propose either to vaccinate each immigrant upon embarkation, or else to auarantine every immigrant vessel fourteen ays before allowing it to laud passengers. roitrae w# A FABTT of Americans traveling from Brussels to Paris were subjected to indefensible bmtaiity at the frontier stition of Teignias. They were awakened by a cnttom-house official to have their luggage examined, were abused for not immediately complying, and assaulted by the commimaire de police for protesting •gainst the way in which Mrs. Reynolds, of Providence, was treated. The lady was rough ly dragged oat of the sleeping oar, bareheaded, without bonnet or cloak, and exposed to the coarse jeers of the douaniera. The male por tion of the party resisting the violence dona them, gendarmes with fixed bayonets were called to tbe assistance of the officials, and three of them arrested and refused permission to telegraph to the American Minister and their friends. They were not released imtil morning and had to pay 500 francs each.... The rumors that Mr, Gladstone will soon re tire from the Premiership are revived. He is said to be worn out by work and anxiety, and looks pale and wan Special prayers and thanksgiving services were held, Sunday, March &, in nearly all the churches of England, on account of the Queen's escape from assassina tion. BY a vote of 257 to 242 the British House of Commons refused to allow Mr. Brad- laugh to affirm. A motion that he be not per mitted to go through the form of taking the oath was adopt"d on motion of Sir Stafford Korthcote, a Tory member. Thb substance of the Russian Gen. Skobeteff*s spoech to the Servian students, which has caused, so much comment in Europe, was that a straggle *>etween the Slav and Teuton was inevitable, for Russia would no longer consent to be held in check by the influence of Germany. When that struggle same it would be a long and sanguinary one, but the Slav would triumph. The words of the fiery warrior have greatly stirred up Bismarck and the Emperor, and set them to questioning Russia's intentions. A siidi excluding atheists from Par- iament ia pending in the British House of Commons....At a consistory soon to be held, the Pope is to create seven new Cardinals, among whom will be Archbishop McCabe, of Dublin, the Archbishops of Seville and Algiers, and the Patriarch of Venice A meeting of rep resentative buxin^ss men of London was held at the Mansion House in favor of a bimetallic eur- rency. The Governor of the Bank of England and several members of Parliament spoke to resolutions is favor of the free coinage of silver and the objects of the Paris Conference, which rm carried. TH* correspondent of the London Timet at Constantinople says that in officia circles a declaration of war oetween Austria and Russia is thought inevitable. In this conneo- t tion. and confirmatory thereof, comes news from St. Petersburg that the Czar has refused to ac- Blifgli W 1Q8KCEAH8. Km PaMkMlaa •> «a $M Latter such cases shall be reserved to Congress, and | Spt,thS re«g,?ati«n °£ ®ea- Ignatieff who is AI _ A • <* » • N. ~ ' RNO IFLOILILP g% I IHQ Q-S'IIFLT- nai4<; & KFS M Vĵ that no judgments rendered by the oourt «hai! be paid until after appropriation made fej that body. Judges of the Court of Claims an satisfied with the proposed arrangement sad beli»sve that the present judicial force will be able to deal with the increased busi ness. The claim is made that the change Would relieve Congress of much burdensome & i' A* important decision has been ren dered in the United States Supreme Court. The Treasury Department has claimed that tbe saccharine strength of sugar, which forms the basis ui-ou which tariff is levied, should be de- tamined scientifically by the polariscope in stead of arbitrarily, and Mr. Sherman, when Becreiwy, so ruled. His decision has been overruled by tbe court of last resort, and at least $2,000,0!)0 collected under protest will have to be refunded to the sugar importers. . A COMMITTEE appointed by the river aanvention at St. Louis, headed by ex Gov. •tanard, made its argument on the improve* Went of the Mississippi before the House Com- merce Committee, and asked an appropriation $4,100,<HM) to put the great river and its tributaries in navigable condition. THESE is a sharp fight in progress at Washington between the proprietors of do- mestic mineral waters and owners and agents •J apollinarie water. Attorney General | York to see his wife. The thermometer VMUMTW, March 10. Borne time during the last political canvass a paragraph was published ia which it was said that Gen. Garfield had, during the war, pre ferred charges of a serious character against his old oommandar, Gen. Rosecnuns. Charles A. Dana made the original charge. This brought out a note from Gen, Garfield to Rose- orane, in which he distinctly said that he had never been untrue to his commander in word or thought, "Dana or any other liar to the contrary." Mr. Dana, to sustain his original statement, has printed a confidential letter from Gen, Garfield addressed to Salmon P. Chase, during the war. Gen. Rosecrana declines at present to say anything about the matter. He is taking steps to ascer tain whether or not the letter is genuine. The letter in printed in fall below. It is marked "Confidential," and dated " Headquarters De partments the Onmberiaad, Nashvilia, 17,1863:* Mr DBAB OOTEBKOR ; I have for a long time wanted to write to you, not only to acknowledge your last kind let ter, but also to say some things confidentially on the movements in this depart ment ; but I have refrained hitherto, lest I do injustice to a good man, and say to yon things which were better left; unsaid. We have now, however, reached a point upon which I feel it proper, and also due to that kind opinion which I"believe yon have had of me, to acquaint you with the condition of affaire hera. I can not conceal from you the fact that I have been greatly tried and dissatisfied with the slow progress that we have made in this depart ment since the battle of Stone River. I will say in the outset that it would bo in the highest de gree nnjvft to say that the 162 days which elapsed between the battle of Stone River and the next advance of this army were spent in idleness or trifling. During that period was performed the enormous and highly important labor which made the Army of the Cumberland what it is, in many respects by far the beat the country has ever known. But for many weeks prior to our late move ment I could not but feel that there was not that live and earnest determination to fling the great weight of this army into the scale ana mnkt: its power felt in crashing the shell of the Rebellion. I have no words to tell yon with how restive and nnnatisiled a spnit I waited and' pleaded for striking a sturdy blow. I could not justly say we were in any proper condition to advance till the early days of May.' At that time tbe strings began to draw sharply upon the rebel*, botn on tne Mississippi and in the East. They began to fear for the safety of Vickshnrg, and before the middle of May they began quietly to draw away forces to aid Pem- berton. I plead for an advance, but not till June began did Gen. Rosecrans begin seriously to meditate an immediate movement. The army had grown anxious with the exception of its leading Generals, who seemed blind to the advantages of the hour. In th# first week of thu month ft council of war was called, and, out of eighteen Generals whose opinion was asked, seventeen were opposed to an ad vance. I was the only one who urged upon the General the imperative necessity or striking a blow at onoe, while Bragg was weaker and we stronger than ever before. I wrote a careful review of the opinions of the Generals, and exhibited the fact, gathered from ample data, that we could throw 65,000 bayonets and sabers against Bragg's 11,000, allowing the most liberal estimates of his foroa. This paper was drawn up on the 8th of June. After its presentation, and a full canvassing of the situation, an advance was agreed upon, but it was delayed, through days which seemed months to me, till the 24th, when it was begun mid ended with what re sults you know. The wisdom of the movement was not only vindicated, but the seventeen dis senting Generals were compelled to confess that, if the movement had beon made ten days earlier, v.hiic the weather was propitious, the army of Bragg would, in all human proba bility, no longer exist. 1 shall never cease to regret the sad delay which lost us so great an opportunity to inflict a mortal blow upon the center of the Rebellion. The work of expelling Bragg from Middle Tennessee occupied nine days and ended July 3, leaving his troops in a most disheartened and demoralized condition, while our army, with a loss of le*s than 1,000 men, was, in a few days, fuller of potential fight than ever before. On the 18th inst. the were rebum, , communication from „ iv* reported a bin to the Senate, ft* last, fee the redemption or «»- renioaof oataMtodlng $10 refundisig eeriM- ostes. Mr. MaDlll presented a memorial from the Iowa trftfMrtatw* asking for $T,0$#,000 for the improvement of the Missouri river. Mr. Beck made a favorable report on the bill to punish the uAawfal certification of bank cheeks, and Mr. Dawes handed back the act to ratify the agreement of the Grow Indians and the Northern Pacific road. A joint resolution was passed to authorize the Secretary of War to use hospital tents for the sufferers by over flow. When the Chines® bill oame np, the Pacific coast Senator* called attention to the reoent chain of meetings in opposition to the Celestials Messrs. Dawes and lMinuinis i«tal^ iated by giving their views on the insue. In the House a bill was passed for a Local Board of Inspectors of Hulls and Boilers at Oallipoln, Ohio. An appropriation of $20,000 was made to erect a statue to Chief Justice John Marshall. In committee of tb« whole on the state of the Union, the Tariff-Commission bill was tabled by 77 to 30. A bill from tb& Senate, authorising the Secretary of War to us© hospital tents for the red ef of .sufferers from the overflow of the Mississippi was pseaed. Mr. Garland introduced a bOl in the Senate, en the 8th inst., for tbe construction or repair of levees on the Mississippi, and Mr. Jackson mported an appropriation of $25,000 to con tinue the improvements of the harbor of Mem- Biis. The motion -to rtfer to the Finance ramittoe the bill for a I quor commission waa lost, and tbe measure WM laid aside. The Chi nese bill cams up. Mr, Ingalls' amendment to limit to ten years the suspension of immigra tion was defeated by a tie vote. Mr. Piatt ! made a lengthy argument against the meas- ] ore, and Messrs. Edmunds and Hoar had an interesting war of words. Mr. Saunders submitted a Joint resolution for a con- j stitutional amendment, allowing th© peo ple to elect Marshals, District Attorneys, Postmasters, and internal-revenue offioera. In the House Mr. Reed reported amendments to the rules, which were laid over. Mr, Harris reported a bill for the eonatruotion of naval vessels. A bill authorizing the purchase of the Freedmen's Bank building at Washington for $250,000 was passed, as was also an appro priation of $7,800 to aid the Society of the Army of the Cumberland to erect a statue to Gen. Garfield. A resolution by Mr. Sawyer was adopted by the Senate, en the 9th inst, instructing the Secretary of War to report the cost of con structing the Sturgeon Bay canal in Wisconsin, with a view to making it free to commerce. A resolution was passed instructing the Secretary of State to ascertain the cause of the im prisonment in Great Britain of an Amer ican ciiizen named Daniel McSweeney. Tbe bill for a liquor commission was taken up, and it was agreed that not more than three shall be prohibitionists. The Chinese bill was amended to provide that no Celestial shall tie naturalised within the United States, and that no laborers can immigrate within twenty years, and then passr-d,- by a vote of 29 to ifi. In the House, Mr. Bunnell reported a bill for eano»-ling stamps on tobacco exported by rail. A bill was also reported for the admission into the Union of the Territory of Washinaton. The Agricultural Appropriation bill came up, and amendments were adopted for sta tistics in regard to the manufacture and expor tation of oleomargarine, for statements of freight charges by rail and river, to appropri ate $35,000 for experiments in making sugar, and to increase the allowance for investigating forestry, when the hill panned. The Senate adopted a resolution, at its ses sion on the MMh, requesting the President to arrange with Nicaragua for the settlement of public and psivate claims. A resolution was passed directing the use of Government vessels In distributing supplies along the Mississippi and its tributaries. A bill was passed for the creation of acommiSBionon the liquor traffic, to be composed of seven persons. Mr. Voorhees introduced a bill appropriating $125,000 for the improvement ol the Wabash river. Th© Senate refused to take up the Japanese In demnity-fund bill ty a vote of 14 to 24. CoL Rufnfi ingalls was confirmed as Quartermaster General of the United States army. In the House, a minority report was presented declaring U. D„ Ball entitled to a seat as delegate from Alaka. Four line mortals from Utah, with over 50,000 signatures, were presented asking & suspension of action on all bills relating to that Territory, and tbe appointment of an unprejudiced com mission to deftarmine the state of affairs. An ' " ""0,000 for extra expenses by the leader of the Pan-Slavist party and the ad vocate of a Russo-Austrian war An Ameri can company is seeking from the Sultan of Turkey the right to boild a railroad in the Province of Bagdad. THE JEANNETTE SURYIT0R8. Istonstlsf Letter Irons Lieut* Daa- enhower. Mr. W. W. Danenhower, of Washington, has received two letters from his son, Lieut John Danenhower, of the Jeannette Arctic ex ploring expedition. The first one is dated Bulen, month of the Lena, Nov. 9, 1881. There is added a postscript dated at Yskoutsk, Deo. 17. The trip up the river from Bulen to Yatoutkk occupied thirty-six days, and was made on sledges with dogs, reindeer and horses. Lieut. Danenhower describes tne journey as one full of hardships. There were stations at intervals on the way, constructed of logs. He describes the last one of these, seventeen miles from Yakoutsk, the best of the lot, a* a small log building with a cowshed attached. It was com posed of one room, in which were about twenty people when his party arrived. In the center was the body of a horse killed for food, and brought into the room to thaw out. During the night the party stopped at this hut Jack Cole, the boats •vain, while laboring under aberration of mind, got up and started out to walk to New and the cars were in full the Cumberland to the Tennessee. I have since then urged with all the earnestness I possess a rapid advance, while Bragg's army was shat tered and under cover, and before Johnston and be could effect a junction. Thus far the General has been singularly disinclined to grasp the situation with a strong hand and make the advantage his own. I write this with more sor row than I can tell you, for I love every bone in his body, and next to my desire to see the Rebellion blasted is my anxiety to see htm blessed. But even the breadth of my love is not sufficient to cover this almost fatal delay. Mv personal relations with Gen. Rosecrans are all that 1 could desire. Officially, I share his counsels and responsibilities even more than I desire, but I beg you to know that this delay is against my judgment and my every wish. Pleasant as are my relations here, I would rath er command a battalion that would follow and follow and strike and strike than to hang back while such golden moments are passing. But the General and'myself believe that £ can do more service in my present place than in command of s division, though I am aware that it it a position that promises better in the way of promotion or popular credit. Bnt, if this inaction continues loug, I shall ask to be relieved and sent somewhere where I can be part of a working army. But I do hope that you will soon hear that this splendid army is at least trying to do its part in the great work. If the War Department has not always been Just, it has certainly been very indulgent to this army. But I feel that the time has now oome when it should allow no plea to keep this army back from the i*iO»t- vigorous activity. I do hope that no hopes of peace or submis sive terms on the part of the rebels will lead the Government to delay the draft and the vigorous vrovtcutiou of the war. Timeo Danooa el dona fervnivs. Let the nation now display tbe majesty of its power and the work will be speedily ended. 1 hope you will pardon this lengthy letter; feat I wanted you to know how the case stands, and I was unwilling to have you think me satis fied with the delays here. With kindest regards I am, as ever^our Frjeud,. J. A. GABFIESJ>« loriatidfcaf $1 igtithOWBs tird, cawed "by the flood in the Mississippi, was passed. A joint resoiution for the use of Government steamers in distrib uting food to the sufferers by the overflow wss adopted. « REAPPORTIONMENT. The Apportionment bill, as it passed Con gress, gives to Alabama, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Indiana, Louisiana, Mary land, Nevada, New Jersey, Oregon, Rhode Island and Tennessee each the same Repre sentatives as now. It takes one member away from Maine, one from New Hamp shire, and one from Vermont, and in creases the Representatives in Arkansas from 4 to S; in California from 4 to Si in Georgia from 9 to 10 ; in Illinois from 19 to 20 ; in Iowa from 9 to 11; in Kansas from S to 7 ; in Massachusetts from 11 to 12 ; inMich- j igan from 10 to 11; in Minnesota from 3 to 5 ; j in Mississippi from 6 to 7 : in Missouri from 13 i to 14 ; in New York from 33 to 34 ; in* Norfh i Carolina Iropi 8 to 9; in Ohio from 20 to 21; in ' Pennsylvania from 27 to 28; in Soutd Caroliua from 5 to 7 ; in Texas from 6 to 11; in Virginia from ft to 10 ; in West Virginia from 3 to 4, and in Wisconsin from 8 to 9. This increases the representation of the Southern States from 106 to 121, a net gain of fifteen, and the representation of the Northern States from 187 to 204, a net gain of seventeen. The New England States as a groun lose three and gain two, a net loss of one. All tbe other groups gain. The bill doei not make reapportionment obligatory this year, as it provides that at ths next election the additional members in any State may be elected by the State at large. The distribution of seats in the House, under the new apportionment, afford* the following comparative result, by geographical sections, with former app 'rlionwrit ABIMTI9XAL HEW8» McVeagh decided that apolhnaris is an artificial JJfcter and therefore dutiable. Secretary wtolger recently reversed the decision. A ••solution is pending in Congress directing the Secretary of the Treasury not to take anv Step toward carrying out his decision until there can be a thorough investigation of the Suestion as to whether apollinaris is entitled to e placed on the free list. Able legal talent has teen employed on both sides. Ex-Senator Colliding IB Baid to be counsel for the apolliuaria Interests, and to have received a cash fee of #50,000.... .The House Naval Committee reo- ammends the construction of a steel man-of- war to patrol the Ukes in place of the worn-out J-Michigan. - ' V ; A S E H S A T i o K A i i e p i s o d e t h e _ I cf the 8enate the other day, white Dawes, of Massachusetts, was delivering JUS speech against the Chinese bUL A dead wm had settled on the chamber, only broken •y the Yoiee of til# Mms&ciittfcefctft orator^ wb@n enddsnly, to the consternation of the Door keepers and spectators, a distinct clapping of Bands was heard in the gallery set apart* for 4he nude sex. All eyes were turned in the direc tion of the sounds, which increased, and #ie tall form uf & «nk styling himself the Apostle Paul ww observed standing erect and Vigorously pounding his hands to show his ap probation of some remark of Mr. Dawes. For saving such execrable taste as to applaud a Senator, and on such a dreary topic, the Door- . keepers, after a short consultation, decided to Jject the intruder, and be was unceremoniously lulled out of his cosy resting place. He was ka same crank who hung around the court •oom during the Goiteau trial, threatening to ^llOOt thft A00M0kH» ••IkM, 60 degrees below zero. It required all Lieut. Danenhower's persuasive powers to induce him to come back into the hut At Yskoutsk Lieut. Danenhower says be found a man who understood French, and was taken to the Governor, who treated him with great kindness and consideration. He detailed a Lieutenant, with instructions to give the wants of the party special attention. They were quartered at a small hotel, conducted on the American plan. Lieut Danenhower speaks of his stay in Yakontsk as exceedingly pleasant and com fortable under the circumstances. Dee, 24 the Governor sent an officer to Lieut, Danenhower F0RTT-8ETENTH CONGRESS. A hill passed the House of Representatives, on the 4th inst. for holding terms of tbe Dis trict Court at Wichita, Kan. A resolution was adopted to dismiss the Louisiana contested- election case of Smith vs. Robertson. Mr. Horr reported a bill to prevent shipping adultersted food and drugs into the United States. The Consular and Diplomatic Appropriation bill wss completed in committee ot the whole, but the final vote was deterred. Tho salary of the Con«n! at L verpool was lined at $6,000. The Consul at Jerusalem was given an advance of $500. Mr. Reed presented a petition from Yankton against the admission of Dakota as a State. Tbe Senate was not in session. Mr. Allison presented In the Senate, on tbe 6th inst, a memorial from the Iowa Legis lature for a bridge over the Missouri river above Omaha. Mr. Morrill made an adverse report on tbe bill for a branch mint at Omaha. Mr. Ingalls reported favorably a bankruptcy bill • mbodying tbe equity system; Mr. Vest a measure for the incorporation of tbe inter- oceanic ship railway, and Mr. Teller the House bill to pension Mrs. Garfield, with an amend ment to include $5,000 per annum for Mrs. Polk and Mrs. Tyler. Bills were introduced for a bridge across the Missouri river near Jefferson, Tbe table bv S ate* is as follow* STATU. to «Tk hirTt ti TT Mo. to aid in repairing levees in the State of Wt!^ „Zlit i^«, MiH*L.Hippi; for the construction of the Illinois formed that it » isiierica, and whe n Hn^ j|1Hglss|pp, . for a commission on tbe t wan usual to commence Christ- jjqaor traffic, and to enable claimants against m a s e v e n i n g h e w e n t h i s s l e i g h f o r t h e p a r t y t # 1 - - « . . . . . . • oome to his residence for supper and spend the evening. In speaking of the terrible voyage of the party, Lieut. Danenho wer says they had to travel 700 miles over ice from the ship to tbe m®»th of the L«na. They landed in shoal water, and were compelled to •wade two miles to land. They were forced to travel 100 miles further before they reached shelter, and he says he was up five days and four nights without sleep or rest. He mentions the fact that, out of thirty-three comprising the crew and ofioers of the Jean- Bstte, only thirteen are known to he living aai MM is known to be dead. mm BEKCHEH contends that he could cure the most rabid Socialibt in five minutee by giving Mm f500,000. Henry, we are • raoid Bocialist, by inspiration, and if you can guarantee a e«re on one applica tion you can send on your medUune. the Government to bring suit to any Federal Circuit Court, There was some debate on the Chinese bill. The House passed the Consular and Diplomatic Appropriation bilL Mr. Bel- i ord introduced a resolution requesting the President to appeal to the Czar to protect the Jews in Russia. Mr. Hewitt introduced a bill to restore to the pension-rolls the names dropped for'participation in the Rebellion. An interesting debate took place on th® bill to l>ermit producers of leaf tobacco to sell the same without license, but th® rules were not suspended. An appropriation of $100,000 was made to continue work on the Davis island dun in the Ohio river. Immediately after the adjournment of the liniiHe a caucus of Democratic members was held to decide upon a line of policy to be pur- sued by the Democrats relating to proposed changes in the rules of the House. It was unanimously resolved to resist, by every par liamentary metnod, the adoption at the pro posed amendments to the raka. Alat-ama.... Arknnoas... California.. Colorado J. Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia Illinois Indiana Iow» Kansas Kentucky........ Lotilxlaua Maine Maryland Mnxi-iicliupetta... Micht Kan Mi nnc.4ota Mi nippi M'.awmri Nebniaka Neviula _ Mew Hampshire.. N^w Jersey New Y-.rk North Carolina.. Obio Oregon.......... Peunsylvania.... Rhode Inland.... Smith Carolina.. Tenuetwee Texut Vermont Virginia.; Mwt Virginia.... WlaooD«<u C Total.. Ctex, W. H. WBIOHT, who died the Isali %Ta dnmfcar* to fhiladelpbia, was onoe Ghialef the Engineering Corps of the Army of pioneers on Gen. Sherman's masch to the sea. Bo built the fcfMgei at Leavenworth and Atchison, and to the Isthmus of Panama with Count de Losseps. TH* court-martial which tried the eaae of Sergeant John A. Mason, charged with at- •itiVe he did not |»|l y e a f c t q j a m directly. He therefcjrd naked another boy to hold np hie khife and fork as Daniel did. The boy agraa^to matte a martyr of himself far the sake of the moral lesson, and the Squire, on seeing him present arma, apologised for apeak^ ing of it, but saMl good manners were t* very great importance, and young men should correct them before going out into tbe world. The student thanked him for his interest, promised not to tempting to «h6ot the ssSaisfn Guitean in the j offend any more, and Daniel's knife and jail at Washington last September, found him I fork were never set up again. At the NNTLTN AN/I IRV-NNDN/L tho UAVITR^CI •» IIAWAJ | , * j end of the next vacation he brought a turkey from his father to the Squire as an expression of his gratitude for Daniel'a ! good manners. | Pi* ' •V$Aa'* IBcleatlllc American.] The sand-hornet is the greatest villain that flies on insect wings, and he inbuilt for a professional murderer. He carries two keen cimeters, besides a deadly poi soned poinard, and is armed throughout with an invulnerable coat of mail. He has things all his own way; he lives a life of tyrannv and feeds on blood. There are few Birds--none that I know guilty a^i't imposed the severest penalty allowed by 1«V. Mason is aeutenoed to dishonorable dis charge from the army, to lose all pay or allow ances now due or which may become due him, and to serve eight years at hard labor as a con vict in the Albany penitentiary. Two INDIAN mnrderers, niunld MJUV cus and Jeff, were hanged at Lakep6rt, CaL, on a double scaffold.... .Fire at Decatur, Tex., destroyed nine business houses on the east aide of tbe public square. Loss reported to be $180,000, but this is probably a mistake. In surance ii^ht. JAMES M. COMITY, who waa appointed Minister Resident to the Hawaiian islands by President Hayes in 1877, has been recalled. It is repo« ted that before Garfield's death he had promised Comly's place to President Hinsdale, of Hiram College. President Arthur, it is said, has promised to respect the wishes of his pre decessor in filling this place. MACLEAN, the Queen's assailant, was committed for trial on charge of high treason. On bwing arraigned he said he would reserve his defense. He declined to cross-examine witnesses. His interests were watched by a solicitor. The evidence was merely a repeti tion bf what 38 already known concerning his attempt on the life of the Queen. It over whelmingly confirmed the statement that his pistol was sufficiently elevated when he fixed for toe ball to have struck her Majesty. Tpe Sonora iailwayf projected three years «go to ran from Guaymas, on the Golf of California, to a connection with the Iran lines, has beon purchased by the Athison, Topeka and Santa Pe Company. It will be completed this year, at cost of $3,600,000, Bm.nnyp.aff acta, in certain «•«*%/ , as apowerful «nd%jUtgjgent. m el«etrie UgMfia Mlefinitely divisi- V \ b i J ^ t & o k t ' a a c r i f i i S e - a r f c e o n o m y . s ; , , ; jmt spawned,Jar# - > ^ i abdfk one five-huudretb of an inch it diam^ftet. * • RIPI,K8 are now sighted up to mudt - longer ranges than formerly, some, up tf < 1,400 yards. LIGHT bodies of some bulk, held ne«r , the vibrating prongs of a tuniug-forlQV ^ are attracted. • . IN BiKchof's apongy-iroiAlter the iron, u said to be. a«L perfect a filter animsi. ,Ut*ro$aL ;J7] •; ;-i. THE tortnsoia hailstone is fliat of aj|; , ^ inverted umbrella, being cone fch»f!>ed anflt * . having ribbed sides and rounded base, j®" ^ COTTON fibre, when quite ripe, consisfM of almost perfectly pure cellulore, acon|» pound of carbon, oxygen and hydrogeik " >* WHEN well impregnated with creosote >** or dead pil, wood is *afe against the at tacks of insects, under ordinary oiircun|; ; " stances. > * ' of--that care to swallow such a red-hot ! FOB the consumption of bitnminottf morsel. It is snid that not even the j coa|( 159 cubic feet of air per ponnd aw butcher-bird hankers after him. The j required; for anthracite, 196 feet; fat*; toad will not touch him, seeming to know by instinct what sort of chain- lightning he contains. Among insects this hornet is the harpy eagle, and near ly all of them are at his mercy. Even the cicada, or drumming harvest-fly, an inoect often larger aitd heavier than him self, is his very common victim. Con sidering these characteristics, it was of especial interest to witness such an ii ce dent as I have here pictured, as one o* thesfl huge tyrants was actually captured and overpowered by the strategy of three black ants. I left the meadow and was ascending a spur of the mountain by the edge of a and will give via Santa Fe a thorougu route Pine wood, when suddenly I espied the from the Missouri to the waters of tbe Pacifio coast... .The steamer Sidney burst her steam- pipe when near Ravenswood, W. Va. Two person* were killed and fifteen wounded. A LONDON Times dispatch from St, Petersburg says the Minister of War told Sko- beleff he was recalled for a breach of disci pline in creating disturbance and excitement abroad. Tbe report is, Gen. Ignat eff told Bkobeleff the Cziur had nothing in P«HI BI» to s*y to him. ' Thl FlfoiMn the Lower Mississippi. UmamB, March Reports received fam the flooded districts ia Eastern Arkansas are ot the moat dishearten ing character. The damage is muoh greater than first announced. Refugees from Desha and Chicoh counties give graphic and thriiling accounts of the floods which drove them from their homes. One man says he was awakened hornet in question almost at my feet. He immediately took to wing, and as he flew on ahead of me I observed a long, pendent object dangling from his body. The incumbrance proved t*x> great an obstacle for^continuous flight, and he soon dropped again upon the path a rod or so in advance of me. I overtook him, and on a close inspection discovered a plucky black ant clutching tightly with its captive, while with its two hiud legs it clung desperately to a long cluster of pine needles which it carried as a dead weight. No sooner did the hornet touch the ground than the ant began to tdg and yell for kelp. There were .certainly evidences to warrant such a belief, for a second ant immediately appeared upon the scene, emerging hurriedly from a thicket of pine tree moss. He was too lat£, however, for the hornet again sought escape in flight. But this at- at midnight by a roaring Bound, and aroused his wife and throe children under the impres- S3&& StanSTK RF was swept from its foundation, and it floated former, for that plucky little assailant had now laid hold of another impedi ment, and this time not only the pine oft on a sea of water. The wreck was almost instantaneous, and the occupants of tho they were forced to seek shelter on the roof. They were repcued the next morning. Many incidents of a similar nature are related. The Governor of . Arkansas says the num ber of persons requiring . asssutanoe in that State alone will reach 12,000. <THK Governor of Missouri telegraped the Secretary of War to increase the rations ordered for the flood sufferers. Secretary Lincoln replied that eight days' supplies had already gone forward to the inunda'ed portion of Missouri, and that the Arkansas Commissioners asu 15,000 rations for forty days, which will exceed the appropriation. Eight army officers will be detailed to invest!- Sate tbe needs of the people, and it is thought lat $400,000 will be required. Congress is to be asked to furnish the poor with seed- corn. • ,• STATICS. 4 Au. .00.. 1,00. New England .... 8 36 28 27 20 Middle. 8 89 87 80 63 Southern .. 18 121 108 85 Western H.. «• 10 101 88 88 S3 Pacific ..... 3 8 8 5 8 T<*a1 32S 24.1 9S9 1HH0 1870 1860 1850 m 8 8 C 7 6 4 8 3 8 ' 4 3 a 1 1 , 4 4 "i . . . 4 1 1 1 1 3 3 1 1 in 9 7 8 20 19 14 9 13 1» 11 11 » 6 3 . i 3 I . 11 10 9 "io 6 6 5 . 4 4 5 3 6 0 6 ( 5 12 n 10 11 11 » 0 4 6 3 2 3 1 « 5 --% . 14 13 9 1 3 1 "1 ; 1 1 1 . 2 3 8 8 7 1 A r> 34 33 8* 83 9 8 7 8 21 30 19 21 1 1 1 1 38 37 34 35 2 2 U '1 4 U 10 10 8 10 11 (. ' 4 , a 2 3 3 3 lfl 9 8 13 4 3 a SI 8 « "*3 3i» 389 34a 338 dwelling could not realize the situation until needie8 but a small branched stick also thi>v iK£>rr* fnTPPfl in tuiAir fihAltpr nn rkiA rnnf », , , , . , y-x t went swinging through the air. Only a yard or so was covered in this flight; and as the ant still yelled for re-iuforcetiionts, its companion again appeared, and rushed upon the oommon foe with such lurious zeal that I felt like patting him on the back. -The whole significance of the scene he had taken in at a glance, and in an instant lie had taken a viselik grip upon the other hind-leg. "N.w came the final tug Of wftr. T'le 'hornet tried to rise, but this sccojjld p is^er ger was too much for him; be could only buzz along the gtouiid, drag ing his load after him, while his new assailau clutched desperately at everything with in its reach -now a dried l^at, now a tin stone, and even overturning an acorn cup in its grasp. Finally, a small, rough stick the niz ) of a mat oh was secured, and th' proved to be the "last straw." In vim were the struggle of escape. The h'» net could do no more thun lift his bod,T from the ground. He rolled and kicked and tumbled, but to no jiropose, except to make it very lively for hie cap tors; and the thrusts of that lively dag ger were wasted on the tletiert air, for whether or not those ants knew its aeareliint? propensities*, they certainly managed to keep clear of this busy ex tremity. How long this pell-mell battle would have lasted I know not, for a third ant now appeared, and it was astonishing to seo him; with every movement of the hornet, he in turn would lay hold of a third stick, and at the same time, clntoh apon those pine needles to add their impediment to the burden of his own bony. $ Practically the ants had won the vic tory, but what they intended to do with the floundering elephant in their hands seemed a problem. But it was to them only a question of patience. They had now pinned their victim securely, and held him to await assistance; it came. The entire neighborhood had been ap prised of the battle, and in less than five minutes the ground swarmed with an, army of re-enforcements. They earner from all directions; they pitched upon that hornet with terrible ferocity, and his complete destruction was now only a question of a very few moments. ACCOUNTS of the floods along the Lower Mis sissippi country grow gloomier as ihe days go by. Whole towns have been swept sway by the angry waters, plantations destroyed and im mense stretches of fertile country m Arkansas and . Mississippi inundated. The destruc tion of property has been appall ing, and famirn threatens the uuformuate vic tims of the overflow. A dispatch from River- tou, Mis-t., says that when the current struck that town it was impossible to pull a boat through, and the people took shelter upon the housetops and upon floating picces of fences, sides of buildings, etc. It was about an hou r before Rosedale was flooded, and the people there had time to save some of their clothing and the most valuable of their light personal property. As soon as possible tbe ladies and children were removed to the Wharf-boat at Terrene, where a temporary •nelter was found, the men staying by their property and homos, seeing all they possessed swept away by the torrent of angry waters. The colored people fared the worst, and many werd lost in the immediate vicinity of fiiverton. H011. L. H. Mangum, of Arkansas, in an interview with an Associated Press reporter at Memphis, said that in the counties of Mississippi, Crittenden, ljee, Pom- sett, Cross, Craighead, St. Francis, Phillips, Desha, Chicot and Monroe, in Arkansas, he had information of about 20,000 destitute peo ple, who would have to be Tea by the Oovern- ment for at leaist forty days. Tiiese couuiies do not include those bordering on the Red river, where great suffering is said to exist. Senator Garland says the cities and towns of the Statu are responding liberally; but they are burdened by refugees from flooded districts. He also says the present distress is only begin ning. Commissioner W. L. Hemingway, of Mis- •isKippi, said the inhabitants of Tunica, Coa- horau, Desoto, Quitman, Bolivar, Washington, Issaquena, Yazoo, Tallanatchee and Sunflower oouutits in ins State, to the 1 >umber of 15,000, were in n like suffering condition. Those coun ties iu Mississippi are all above Vicksburg, and there are other counties below that city that have suffered by the floods. Three thousand Tennessceans residing along tbtf Mississippi river are reported by Gov. Haw kins iu a destitute condition. The Governor of Illinois iias awked the Secretary of War for re lief for the sufferers from tbe overflow of tho Ohto in Pulaalu county, HL; Secretary Lincoln has ordered relief to be sent,' lh$ yiMi ; WAniNOTON, <wna4» has declined the nomination Of Jtt tic® of the United States Su preme Court, au , the President has tendered the appointmenl to Senator Edmunds, of Ver mont Th© mix nation waa «®nt to the Seaat* but is not to be 3resented until Mr. Edmonds determines whet «r K not he will acoept Mr. Edmunds is in ^ >ubt whether he will aooepL His inclinations re to decline the appointment. He is not in goo. health, and is not inclined to undertake tbe ai Itioos duties of the btiML IT K the mi (fortune of many reforms that cranks sontrol ttamn.--Seymour Times. A2*-EALS for aid are being received by t^R- Secretary of War from the sufferers from floods In Illinois, Missouri, Tennessee, Mississippi and Arkansas. In Pulaski county, IU., 4,000 persons are in need of assistance. The relief commissioners for Arkansas, Mississippi and Tennessee report 43,000 destitute persons. Re ports from every section of the Southern Mis sissippi valley givo accounts of destitution and suffering. Hundreds of poor colored people have been rendered houseless by'tho water, losing everything, and have positively nothing to eat The white people are poorly off them selves, nearly all of their stocs being lost, and being nearly impoverished owing to the bad crops or last year. The to%n of Austin, Miss., between Memphis and Helens, has been almost entirely destroyed. Hots. M. C. Harris, who was sent to Desha county. Ark., by Gov. Churchill to aid 111 distributing supplies to persons rendered destitute by the overllow, reports that th© suf fering and destitution is beyond description. Scarcely a farm-house or residence in the bot tom has escaped inundation. Tbe people have been compelled to build false floors in their houses or seek safety on some I of the higher lands, where, in rudely constructed camps of brush boughs and cane, tbey sit- and wait for starvation and death. It is appalling, and without GovernB$sat aid, liberally and quickly hastened, there is no telling where it will end. Many person* have been feeding on carcasses of drowned cattle. Personal investigation, as well as assurances from reputable gentlemen, oon- vincedl Mr. Harris that not less than 600 families, averaging say six to the family, in Desha county alone, are dependent upon the charity of the Government The indications poiut to a long continuance of the overflow, the most sanguine hardly dar ing to hope for its subsiding before May. Webster In Boyhood. When Daniel Webster went to school at Exeter, N. H., he boarded at old Squire Clifford's. Daniel had a bad habit of holding his knife and fork per pendicularly in his fists, and the Squire thought it would be a kindness to re form him ; but as the boy was very sen- wood, 93 feet. TRUE diamond, bortand earbon, differ; respectively in a more or less perfeffc erystalization, and pam into eaOn othJr by insensible degree*. • • • t # s:-;- THE milky juice of the fig tree pos sesses a digestive power, and wheo mixed with animal tissue preserves ifc • from decay a long time. THE acids contained in fruits all a$|- npon tin, so that fruit preserved in tai ' cans often contains tin in solution, and || consequently poisonous. GRAY bodies properly selected as to height of tone, when contiguous to col ored bodies, exhibit the phenomena of contrast of color more strikingly th|« either black or white substances. AiitJM water in recommended for pre venting bugs and worms from infesting flour-mills. Dissolve two pounds (C alum in three quarts of warm water and apply with a brush to crevices where in sects may be concealed. . STEEIJ tools should never be heated, either for forging or tempering, in .a fresh fire unless it be charcoal. If colfe is not at baud the fire should be allowed to burn until all the gas is burned out of the coal before the steel is intro duced. Y./ Two Leipsic chemists have devised a. process for obtaining sugar in a perma nently liquid form. This result is said to be effected by adding to a purified sugar solution a small quantity of citric aeid, which combines with the sugar and deprives it of its tendency to crystalize. AN EXHIBITION of the arts and indus tries of Bavaria will be held at Number next year, and vigorous preparations are being made iu the'way of building. Al ready contributor* to the number Of 1,702 have promised to assist, and tbe whole affair is to be on the grandest scale. ANHYDROUS phosphoric acid is be lieved to be the most powerfnl drying agent known. When air from which the moisture has been removed by ordi nary means and then dried by sulphuric acid is subjected to its influence it is found that the two-millionth part of the weight of the itir in the form of moisture* disappears. A RECENT telegraphic experiment, of a singular description, consists of the reading of large silvered letters. anquaM yard in Bize, and fixed to a blackened board, by refracting telescopes. Tins method succeeded well at a distance of three miles, and the inventor, an officer in the French service, thinks he will succeed in reading messages at a dis tance ofsixty mil e8. v ••• The Lhwer Cfoasw. I * r * V IThe Me«haoic.] . / . The lower classes. Who "are theyf .The toiling man and woman, the farmer, the mechanic, tlie artisan, the inventor, the producer? Far from it. These are nature's nobility. No matter if they are high or low in station, rich or poor in pelf, conspicuous or humble in position, they are surely the upper circles in the order of nature, whatever the factitious distinctions of society, fashionable cr unfashionable decree. It is not low, it is the highest duty, privilege and pleas ure for the great man and liigh-souled woman to earn what they possess, to work their own way through life, to bo the architects of their own fortunes. Some may rank the classes we have alluded to as only relatively low. and, in fact, the middling classes. We insist they are absolutely the very highest. If there be a class of human beings on earth who may be properly denominated low, it is that class who spend without earning, who consume without produc ing, who dissipate upon the Bsnjings of their fathers aud relatives without being anything in or of themselves. THE present is the living sum total of the whole past.--Carlyle. A Valuable Diamond. When the Khedive of Esrypt sent a diamond necklace as % wedding present to Mias Minnie Sherman, fashionable Ne v Yorkers grew envions 'of the fair daughter of the General of Uncle team's armies; and yet a more elegant gem ti'uu the combined diamonds iu the Khedive's gift came to this eity unher alded. It is valued at $60,000. Hun dreds of years ago this brilliant f tmous in India, and was known as the Pearl of India. At the beginning of the present century it belonged to a Rajah in India. Accounts of its great beauty coming to the Viceroy of Egypt, he tent a special commission to the Rajah to negotiute for its purchase. The com mission was successful. Shortly after it had come into the possession of the Viceroy his favorite daughter was mar ried to the Sultan and the Pearl of India constituted one of her wedding presents. Since theu it has remained in the keeping of the Imperial familv Of Turkey, until pnrcjiuaed by a New York firm. ' * This gem has no superior in Amqrifa, and is claimed to be the most elegant ever sceu anywhere. It is an old mine, stone atid weighs 25 7-16 karats. It is cut in the old style, and experts both in the Old and Ixow World declare that in 'this respect it can not be improved. • It is absolutely perfect, and will bear the closest inspection under tbe most powerful glass, which is a remarkable fact, considering the siae'of tlw 8*}ne.-- York Star. Tn b<tf who sineei** th© seat of Ma trovers with dynamise, when he ex pected an interview with Ms father, take# comfort to the feflMbfit 'hat the old man can measure out a drink of only two fingers, with his right hand^ but otherwise thinks he'd hnve done better to take the wallopping. He man t reckon on the dynamite's working Wbpth direc tions. That's were lot»«f folks slip Up iu their little schemes. TH* speaking trumpet is said to have been invented by Alexander the Great % ILE MAMM 1 NEW YOLIK. .$ • 9f @12 <* .. 6 00 <a 8 1# .. nx® .. 1 a# _ .. 1» 91 «4 % w 48 « » ,.»« * ©17 .. loxe i*j« «6 O 19 Hooa COTTON FLOUR--8uperflne WMEAT--MO. 2 Spring ' No. 3 Bad. y., 6oiv--t) ngmded.. OATS--Mixed W' ' POBK--Mess. LABD... M-'" CHICAGO. BSSVKS--Chote# Graded Steers.... < .Cows and Hetfets. Medium to Fair Hooa fu>OB--Fancy White Winter Ex.. Good to Choice SyriOf Ex WHKAT--No. 3 Spring..#... No. 3 Spring OoBH--No. a OATS--No. USE--NO. 2 BABLKY---NO. 3. BUTTEB--CHOICE Creamery EGOS--Fresh FOB*--Hess LABI>*'•; 7' WHKat-^NO; 9 CORN-- NA 3 OA ri---Not 2 Bsa--No. *.... r. B»»LKv-na 2.................... SB @ 1 PO»K--H«(W....^..........16-0# <^1« - /"-v-:- •••'• ,':STI Lduttft Whut-Ia IBM CORN--Mixed ). I........ OATS--Now 3 .\ RYK JPOSK--llees...., • <* s as S 39 « 76 7 00 e 25 tat 1 08 69 41 SI » # 71 e 4 is 6 6S 0 7 » (4 7 OS & 1 2T <#10* a « a ci 9 » , » * 1 0b . as a « . 18 @ 1» M 00 01« 3S 10 « 10* 1 13 40 WKKAT.... OOBH OATS.............. Bn FOB*--]tap mN<&NNAT£"* 1 SB o 1 at *..11 3i 10 TOLEDO. WHB«T--He. i Bed. OOBK OATS DETROIT. Fi.n-- Ohotes.. WHBAT--No. 1 WBTTS OOBM--Mixed OATS--Mixed M BABLXT (per esntat) 3 as POBK--Mess.. 17 V _ INDLi.HaFOX.lB. WHEAT--NO. 3 Bed 1 M OOBK--No. 3 Q OATS 44 EAST LIBERTY, FA. OATTLB--Bsst. NO N % M ZtlMet-.